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PRO Hair Safe Study: The Patient’s Perspective on the Effects of Scalp Cooling on Hair Preservation

PURPOSE: Alopecia has been reported a distressing side-effect of chemotherapy for breast cancer patients (BCP) that is highly relevant for quality of life during treatment. For the prevention of chemotherapy-induced alopecia, scalp cooling (SC) has been reported to be an effective and safe intervent...

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Autores principales: Brunner, Christine, Egle, Daniel, Ritter, Magdalena, Kofler, Ricarda, Giesinger, Johannes M, Schneitter, Lisa, Sztankay, Monika, Emmelheinz, Miriam, Abdel Azim, Samira, Wieser, Verena, Oberguggenberger, Anne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10361405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37484698
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/BCTT.S412338
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author Brunner, Christine
Egle, Daniel
Ritter, Magdalena
Kofler, Ricarda
Giesinger, Johannes M
Schneitter, Lisa
Sztankay, Monika
Emmelheinz, Miriam
Abdel Azim, Samira
Wieser, Verena
Oberguggenberger, Anne
author_facet Brunner, Christine
Egle, Daniel
Ritter, Magdalena
Kofler, Ricarda
Giesinger, Johannes M
Schneitter, Lisa
Sztankay, Monika
Emmelheinz, Miriam
Abdel Azim, Samira
Wieser, Verena
Oberguggenberger, Anne
author_sort Brunner, Christine
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Alopecia has been reported a distressing side-effect of chemotherapy for breast cancer patients (BCP) that is highly relevant for quality of life during treatment. For the prevention of chemotherapy-induced alopecia, scalp cooling (SC) has been reported to be an effective and safe intervention. However, data on the patient’s perspective on effectiveness and applicability of SC in a clinical routine setting are scarce. In this comparative study, we aimed at a longitudinal assessment of patient-reported outcome (PRO) data on the effect of SC on alopecia and its effect on symptoms and functional health when applied in clinical routine in BCP receiving taxane or anthracycline-based chemotherapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Study participants were allocated either to the intervention group receiving SC or to the control group based on patient preference (non-randomized study). All patients completed PRO-measures on hair preservation (EORTC Item Library items on hair loss), symptom and functional health measures (EORTC QLQ-C30 and -BR23) and the Body Image Scale (BIS). Outcomes were assessed at chemotherapy start (baseline), mid-chemotherapy, last chemotherapy cycle, 3 months follow-up and 6–9 months follow-up. RESULTS: Overall, we included 113 patients: 75 patients underwent SC (mean age = 51.3 years, 52.7% premenopausal); 38 patients standard care (mean age = 55.6 years, 39.5% premenopausal). A total of 53 patients (70.7%) discontinued SC, with 39 patients (73.5%) stating alopecia as the primary reason. On average, BCP stayed on treatment with the cooling cap for 40.2% of the duration of their chemotherapy (SD 25.3%). In an intention-to-treat analysis, we found no difference between the SC group and the control group with regard to their patient-reported hair loss (p=0.831) across the observation period, overall QOL (p=0.627), emotional functioning (p=0.737), social functioning (p=0.635) and body image (p=0.463) did not differ between groups. CONCLUSION: We found a high rate of SC-decliners and no beneficial effects of SC for patient-reported hair loss, symptoms and functional health. The efficacy and tolerability of SC applied in a clinical routine setting hence appeared to be limited. The further determination and up-front definition of criteria prognostic for effectiveness of SC may be helpful to identify patient subgroups that may experience a treatment benefit.
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spelling pubmed-103614052023-07-22 PRO Hair Safe Study: The Patient’s Perspective on the Effects of Scalp Cooling on Hair Preservation Brunner, Christine Egle, Daniel Ritter, Magdalena Kofler, Ricarda Giesinger, Johannes M Schneitter, Lisa Sztankay, Monika Emmelheinz, Miriam Abdel Azim, Samira Wieser, Verena Oberguggenberger, Anne Breast Cancer (Dove Med Press) Original Research PURPOSE: Alopecia has been reported a distressing side-effect of chemotherapy for breast cancer patients (BCP) that is highly relevant for quality of life during treatment. For the prevention of chemotherapy-induced alopecia, scalp cooling (SC) has been reported to be an effective and safe intervention. However, data on the patient’s perspective on effectiveness and applicability of SC in a clinical routine setting are scarce. In this comparative study, we aimed at a longitudinal assessment of patient-reported outcome (PRO) data on the effect of SC on alopecia and its effect on symptoms and functional health when applied in clinical routine in BCP receiving taxane or anthracycline-based chemotherapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Study participants were allocated either to the intervention group receiving SC or to the control group based on patient preference (non-randomized study). All patients completed PRO-measures on hair preservation (EORTC Item Library items on hair loss), symptom and functional health measures (EORTC QLQ-C30 and -BR23) and the Body Image Scale (BIS). Outcomes were assessed at chemotherapy start (baseline), mid-chemotherapy, last chemotherapy cycle, 3 months follow-up and 6–9 months follow-up. RESULTS: Overall, we included 113 patients: 75 patients underwent SC (mean age = 51.3 years, 52.7% premenopausal); 38 patients standard care (mean age = 55.6 years, 39.5% premenopausal). A total of 53 patients (70.7%) discontinued SC, with 39 patients (73.5%) stating alopecia as the primary reason. On average, BCP stayed on treatment with the cooling cap for 40.2% of the duration of their chemotherapy (SD 25.3%). In an intention-to-treat analysis, we found no difference between the SC group and the control group with regard to their patient-reported hair loss (p=0.831) across the observation period, overall QOL (p=0.627), emotional functioning (p=0.737), social functioning (p=0.635) and body image (p=0.463) did not differ between groups. CONCLUSION: We found a high rate of SC-decliners and no beneficial effects of SC for patient-reported hair loss, symptoms and functional health. The efficacy and tolerability of SC applied in a clinical routine setting hence appeared to be limited. The further determination and up-front definition of criteria prognostic for effectiveness of SC may be helpful to identify patient subgroups that may experience a treatment benefit. Dove 2023-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10361405/ /pubmed/37484698 http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/BCTT.S412338 Text en © 2023 Brunner et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/This work is published and licensed by Dove Medical Press Limited. The full terms of this license are available at https://www.dovepress.com/terms.php and incorporate the Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial (unported, v3.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) ). By accessing the work you hereby accept the Terms. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed. For permission for commercial use of this work, please see paragraphs 4.2 and 5 of our Terms (https://www.dovepress.com/terms.php).
spellingShingle Original Research
Brunner, Christine
Egle, Daniel
Ritter, Magdalena
Kofler, Ricarda
Giesinger, Johannes M
Schneitter, Lisa
Sztankay, Monika
Emmelheinz, Miriam
Abdel Azim, Samira
Wieser, Verena
Oberguggenberger, Anne
PRO Hair Safe Study: The Patient’s Perspective on the Effects of Scalp Cooling on Hair Preservation
title PRO Hair Safe Study: The Patient’s Perspective on the Effects of Scalp Cooling on Hair Preservation
title_full PRO Hair Safe Study: The Patient’s Perspective on the Effects of Scalp Cooling on Hair Preservation
title_fullStr PRO Hair Safe Study: The Patient’s Perspective on the Effects of Scalp Cooling on Hair Preservation
title_full_unstemmed PRO Hair Safe Study: The Patient’s Perspective on the Effects of Scalp Cooling on Hair Preservation
title_short PRO Hair Safe Study: The Patient’s Perspective on the Effects of Scalp Cooling on Hair Preservation
title_sort pro hair safe study: the patient’s perspective on the effects of scalp cooling on hair preservation
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10361405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37484698
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/BCTT.S412338
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